Resolvers are created using the enhanced-resolve
package. The Resolver
class extends the tapable
class and uses tapable
to provide a few hooks.
The enhanced-resolve
package can be used directly to create new resolvers,
however any compiler
instance has a few resolver instances that can be
tapped into.
Before reading on, make sure to have a look at the
enhanced-resolve
and tapable
documentation.
There are three types of built-in resolvers available on the compiler
class:
normal
: Resolves a module via an absolute or relative path.context
: Resolves a module within a given context.loader
: Resolves a webpack loader.Depending on need, any one of these built-in resolvers, that are used by the compiler
,
can be customized via plugins:
compiler.resolverFactory.plugin('resolver [type]', resolver => {
resolver.hooks.resolve.tapAsync('MyPlugin', params => {
// ...
});
});
Where [type]
is one of the three resolvers mentioned above.
See the enhanced-resolve
documentation for a full list of hooks and their
description.
The resolvers mentioned above can also be customized via a configuration file
with the resolve
or resolveLoader
options. These options allow
users to change the resolving behavior through a variety of options including
through resolve plugins
.
The resolver plugins, e.g. DirectoryNamedPlugin
, can be included
directly in resolve.plugins
rather than using directly in plugins
configuration option.
Note that the
resolve
configuration affects thenormal
andcontext
resolvers whileresolveLoader
is used to modify theloader
resolver.